Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

LSU outlasts Alabama, 46-41

‘Championsh­ip quarterbac­k’ proves the difference in epic 46-41 win

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No. 3 Ohio State ....... 73 Maryland ..................... 14

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Joe Burrow sprinted toward the LSU fans to celebrate a monumental victory, and moments later was hoisted on the shoulders of two beefy teammates.

They carried him only part of the way across the field. The ride isn’t finished for Burrow and No. 1ranked LSU, but the quarterbac­k’s masterful performanc­e Saturday in a 46-41 victory over nemesis and second-ranked Alabama marked a huge step toward the Tigers’ championsh­ip goals.

Burrow passed for 393 yards and three touchdowns, answered challenge after challenge and helped end an eight-year string of futility against Alabama that started with the national title game in January 2012. Now, the Tigers’ sights are set on another shot at national and Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ips.

LSU coach Ed Orgeron said that for the first time he told his players pre-Alabama, “You’re the better team.”

“We’ve finally got the tools that we need to beat those guys,” Orgeron said. “To have a championsh­ip team, you’ve got to have a championsh­ip quarterbac­k.”

The Tigers (9-0, 5-0 SEC, No. 2 College Football Playoff) are no longer second fiddle in the SEC West Division, or maybe in the playoff rankings. And Burrow stamped himself as the Heisman Trophy front-runner with a gutty performanc­e when he answered every challenge from the Crimson Tide.

And the challenges were plentiful.

That came as no surprise to Burrow.

“I knew they were going to come back,” he said. “That’s Alabama on the other side, dynasty. I was really happy with the way we responded.”

Alabama (8-1, 5-1, No. 3 CFP) rallied from a 33-13 halftime deficit to pull within a touchdown three times in the fourth quarter.

The showdown lived up to its billing as a duel between two high-powered offenses and star quarterbac­ks. Tua Tagovailoa launched an 85-yard touchdown pass to DeVonta Smith with 1:21 left after a Tigers scoring march.

Justin Jefferson recovered the onside kick and LSU ran out the clock, finally triumphant.

Burrow completed 31 of 39 passes and ran for 64 yards. He said titles were what he was after when he transferre­d to LSU from Ohio State.

“We’re not done yet,” the two-year starter said. “It’s Game 9. We’ve got three more regular-season ones and the SEC championsh­ip. This was never our goal. We’ve got bigger goals than this.”

Clyde Edwards-Helaire ran for three touchdowns and caught a scoring pass, getting emotional on the sideline after a late touchdown that appeared once again to put the game away.

Tagovailoa, 20 days removed from ankle surgery, was 21 of 40 for 418 yards and four touchdowns with an intercepti­on and a fumble. He was called a “gametime decision” all week, looked shaky early and appeared to be limping after the game, but he kept Alabama in it.

Coach Nick Saban said Tagovailoa practiced all week without any issues.

“He said he could play in the game, he wanted to play in the game and he thought he could go out and do a good job,” Saban said. “I think he was a warrior in terms of what he did.”

Smith had 213 yards and two touchdowns on seven catches for Alabama.

Edwards-Helaire ran for 103 yards on 20 carries and had nine catches for 77 yards. Alabama’s Najee Harris, who didn’t have a carry in the second quarter, finished with 146 rushing yards and a touchdown and added a receiving score.

LSU outgained Alabama by a slender 559 yards to 541. The Tigers had scored just 39 combined points in the past five meetings between the two teams, but this was an entirely different offense.

The Tigers have eight wins over top-10 teams in the past two seasons, none bigger than this. Burrow & Co. faced down more than 101,000 mostly hostile fans and a strong pass rush.

Alabama could be shut out of the playoffs barring upsets elsewhere, mostly because of its brutal schedule.

“We don’t really control our own destiny but if we finish the season the right way, we can see where it takes us,” Saban said.

Alabama will regroup by traveling Saturday to Mississipp­i State. LSU is at Mississipp­i.

 ?? Associated Press ?? LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow gets carried off the field Saturday afterhelmn­getisnfeoe­rtrhine gBigaTEwNi­Cnonfofere­Nncoe;.w1ithLSU against No. 2 Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Associated Press LSU quarterbac­k Joe Burrow gets carried off the field Saturday afterhelmn­getisnfeoe­rtrhine gBigaTEwNi­Cnonfofere­Nncoe;.w1ithLSU against No. 2 Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala.

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